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单词 compunction
释义

Definition of compunction in English:

compunction

noun kəmˈpʌŋkʃ(ə)nkəmˈpəŋ(k)ʃ(ə)n
  • mass noun, usually with negative A feeling of guilt or moral scruple that prevents or follows the doing of something bad.

    they used their tanks without compunction
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The courts have no similar compunction about making injunctions to prevent torts and these have very much the same effect.
    • The ability to trample the rights of fellow human beings without compunction is rooted in a belief that the needs of society outweigh the needs of the individual.
    • How can soldiers, who are trained to kill enemy combatants without compunction, be decompressed and integrated back into civilian life?
    • Designed with love, it will be destroyed without compunction.
    • But I can, without compunction, recommend the film purely on its own merits.
    • He attacked the credibility of alleged accomplices who had turned state witness, saying there was little doubt that they had lied without compunction.
    • Altogether this provided an ideological charter for the most extreme action, without compunction or remorse.
    • In the marketplace everything becomes a commodity and all workers become wage slaves who can be fired without compunction.
    • He has no shame and no compunction about throwing around baseless, false accusations such as liar, theft and fraud.
    • If the ancient human habit of taking what we want without understanding, without compassion, and without compunction continues unrestricted, it will lead us to extinction.
    • For it is clear they would do the same again, both in America and around the world, without compunction or hesitation.
    • The truth is that the average consumer today has no moral compunction about beating the system.
    • The ‘nice’ party has been revealed as no such thing - rather, enthusiastically and without compunction, it destroyed its greatest electoral asset, a leader who had delivered its finest hour only months before.
    • You will kill without compunction and die without complaint.
    • She clutched the bundle of wood to her chest like a shield and lied without compunction.
    • We call them sociopaths because they will cheerfully cheat or attack others without compunction.
    • Hence his way of life can be sacrificed without compunction, and his protests go unheard.
    • The teachers themselves organise photocopying of books without any moral compunction, assuming that they are after all helping their students.
    • V operates without compunction or mercy, and his brand of enforced anarchy is just as dictatorial as the forces to which he is opposed.
    • Who lied, cheated, and stole without compunction?
    Synonyms
    scruples, misgivings, qualms, worries, unease, uneasiness, hesitation, hesitancy, doubts, reluctance, reservations
    guilt, feelings of guilt, guilty conscience, pangs/twinges of conscience, remorse, regret, contrition, contriteness, self-reproach, repentance, penitence

Derivatives

  • compunctious

  • adjective kəmˈpʌŋkʃəskəmˈpəŋ(k)ʃəs
    • Characterized by guilt or moral scruple that prevents or follows the doing of something bad.

      compunctious feelings of apprehension
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The actual audience, like the heavenly one, can peep through the blanket of stage dark, and what it sees is that a compunctious visiting of nature prevents Lady Macbeth from carrying out the act at all.
      • And yet the point remains: the true psychopath has not in the first place the compunctious visitings whose passage needs to be stopped up.
      • We are so conscientious and compunctious and compassionate that we did the EIA as early as in 1988 for the 2007 project.
  • compunctiously

  • adverbkəmˈpʌŋkʃəslikəmˈpəŋ(k)ʃəsli

Origin

Middle English: from Old French componction, from ecclesiastical Latin compunctio(n-), from Latin compungere 'prick sharply', from com- (expressing intensive force) + pungere 'to prick'.

Rhymes

conjunction, dysfunction, expunction, function, junction, malfunction, multifunction, unction
 
 

Definition of compunction in US English:

compunction

nounkəmˈpəŋ(k)ʃ(ə)nkəmˈpəNG(k)SH(ə)n
  • usually with negative A feeling of guilt or moral scruple that prevents or follows the doing of something bad.

    spend the money without compunction
    he had no compunction about behaving blasphemously
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He attacked the credibility of alleged accomplices who had turned state witness, saying there was little doubt that they had lied without compunction.
    • The ability to trample the rights of fellow human beings without compunction is rooted in a belief that the needs of society outweigh the needs of the individual.
    • He has no shame and no compunction about throwing around baseless, false accusations such as liar, theft and fraud.
    • Designed with love, it will be destroyed without compunction.
    • For it is clear they would do the same again, both in America and around the world, without compunction or hesitation.
    • The truth is that the average consumer today has no moral compunction about beating the system.
    • The ‘nice’ party has been revealed as no such thing - rather, enthusiastically and without compunction, it destroyed its greatest electoral asset, a leader who had delivered its finest hour only months before.
    • Who lied, cheated, and stole without compunction?
    • But I can, without compunction, recommend the film purely on its own merits.
    • Hence his way of life can be sacrificed without compunction, and his protests go unheard.
    • In the marketplace everything becomes a commodity and all workers become wage slaves who can be fired without compunction.
    • How can soldiers, who are trained to kill enemy combatants without compunction, be decompressed and integrated back into civilian life?
    • V operates without compunction or mercy, and his brand of enforced anarchy is just as dictatorial as the forces to which he is opposed.
    • You will kill without compunction and die without complaint.
    • We call them sociopaths because they will cheerfully cheat or attack others without compunction.
    • The courts have no similar compunction about making injunctions to prevent torts and these have very much the same effect.
    • Altogether this provided an ideological charter for the most extreme action, without compunction or remorse.
    • If the ancient human habit of taking what we want without understanding, without compassion, and without compunction continues unrestricted, it will lead us to extinction.
    • The teachers themselves organise photocopying of books without any moral compunction, assuming that they are after all helping their students.
    • She clutched the bundle of wood to her chest like a shield and lied without compunction.
    Synonyms
    scruples, misgivings, qualms, worries, unease, uneasiness, hesitation, hesitancy, doubts, reluctance, reservations

Origin

Middle English: from Old French componction, from ecclesiastical Latin compunctio(n-), from Latin compungere ‘prick sharply’, from com- (expressing intensive force) + pungere ‘to prick’.

 
 
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更新时间:2024/9/21 15:53:06